Every weekend my friends would go to classical-music concerts-Bach, Beethoven, Haydn. People didn’t care about material possessions so much, they didn’t care about clothes, what shoes you wore, what kind of watch you wore, they didn’t care if you knew rich people. What constitutes Chinese reality, particularly from the eighties onward, is always changing. With The Invisibility Cloak, I thought back to 1980, when I was an undergraduate in Shanghai and I felt that life for Chinese people was extremely spiritually rich. How did you come up with the idea for the book? The exchange below is a condensed, edited version of their discussion, including some questions from the audience that day. ![]() He was joined by Morse, his translator and two moderators, Lydia H. Last month, Ge Fei visited New York, where he appeared in conversation at Columbia University’s Weatherhead East Asian Institute. Then he reels in a promising but shady client who demands the best sound system in the world: an assignment that takes Cui to an unexpectedly dark place. The Invisibility Cloak is a comic tour de force Kirkus Reviews wrote that it “packs in wit, social commentary, and an emotional depth that will lift the reader’s spirits like few recent English-language books.” Cui designs and installs custom stereos for hyperrich audiophiles and intellectuals, for whom he has an unreserved contempt. Cui, a down-at-heel Everyman who lives with his sister in an apartment where the wind is always blowing through a crack in the wall. Set in cutthroat, consumer-driven Beijing, the novel follows Mr. It’s the first in our monthly book club with New York Review Books. ![]() Now, for the first time, one of his novels is available in English: 2012’s The Invisibility Cloak, translated by Canaan Morse. He started his career in the eighties with “vanguard fiction”-self-reflexive works focusing on history, historical narrative, memory, and myth. Ge Fei is one of China’s foremost experimental writers. From the cover of The Invisibility Cloak.
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